Abstract
In January 1993 the first television programmes funded by the Comataidh Telebhisein Gdidhlig (CTG) were broadcast in Scotland. In the ten years since, much has changed in Scotland, in the Gaelic world, and in the continuing transformation of the media by digital technology and globalisation, with these different aspects meeting in the current controversy over the government's reluctance to fully fund a Gaelic digital television channel. It is a suitable moment to step back and consider what presence Gaelic has in the Scottish media, what has been achieved over the last ten years, and what difference this is likely to make to the survival of the language itself.
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